Current Style: Standard

Repertoire
Héctor Berlioz: Les Francs-Juges, op. 3 (1826) 13′
Maurice Ravel: Piano Concerto for the Left Hand in D (1929-30) 19′
Héctor Berlioz: Fantastic Symphony, Op. 14 (1830) 55’
ARTISTS
Anna Vinnitskaya, piano
Louis Langrée, conductor
Barcelona Symphony Orchestra (OBC)
Programme
The overture to Les Francs-juges is considered Hector Berlioz’s first orchestral work. However, dissatisfied with this opera of his youth, he destroyed most of the score preserving —in addition to the overture, which Liszt adapted for piano— only materials that he would reuse in the “Marche au supplice” of the Symphonie fantastique. This memorably unsettling composition laces nightmares with the longing for a beauty lost or never attained.
The programmatic hallucinations of the symphony transport the listener to a barely luminous or expressible reality —to the realm of extreme passions or affections, where the Romantic imagination is unleashed, and almost make one lose their footing— spring from the despair of an unrequited lover. The composer’s love for the actress Harriet Smithson —who inspires the plot— was, however, reciprocal.
Equally rooted in concrete circumstances —in a century dramatically shaped by war— is the Piano Concerto for the Left Hand. Maurice Ravel composed it for the pianist Paul Wittgenstein, brother of the renowned philosopher, who had lost an arm in World War I. On this occasion, the concert will be performed by Anna Vinnitskaya and conducted by Louis Langrée.
Concert as part of the commemoration of the 150th anniversary of the birth of Ricard Viñes i Roda.
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